Christian Fuchs on Wed, 24 Jul 2013 14:00:59 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Submission reminder - CfP: Philosophers of the World Unite! Theorizing |
CfP: Philosophers of the World Unite! Theorizing Digital Labour and=20 Virtual Work: Definitions, Forms and Transformations Special issue of tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique ABSTRACT SUBMISSION DEADLINE: JULY 31, 2013 CfP: http://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/announcement/view/14 Supported by COST Action IS1202 =E2=80=9CDynamics of Virtual Work=E2=80=9D= -Working Group=20 3 =E2=80=9CInnovation and the Emergence of New Forms of Value Creation an= d New=20 Economic Activities=E2=80=9C (http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com,=20 http://dynamicsofvirtualwork.com/wg3/), tripleC (http://www.triple-c.at): Communication, Capitalism & Critique.=20 Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society. Editors: Marisol Sandoval, Christian Fuchs, Jernej A. Prodnik, Sebastian = Sevignani, Thomas Allmer In 1845, Karl Marx (1845, 571) formulated in the 11th Feuerbach Thesis:=20 =E2=80=9CThe philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways= ; the=20 point is to change it=E2=80=9D. Today, interpretation of the world has be= come an=20 important form of labour that is expressed on and with the help of=20 digital media. It has therefore become common to talk about digital=20 labour and virtual work. Yet the changes that digital, social and mobile = media bring about in the world of labour and work have thus far only=20 been little theorized and theoretically interpreted. In order to change=20 the information society to the better, we first have to interpret=20 digital labour with the help of critical theories. Theorists of the=20 world from different fields, backgrounds, interdisciplines,=20 transdisciplines and disciplines have to unite for this collective=20 philosophical task. The overall task of this special issue of tripleC: Communication,=20 Capitalism & Critique is to gather contributions that help to an=20 understanding of how to critically theorize digital labour, virtual work = and related concepts. Theorizing digital labour requires us to provide=20 grounded 1) definitions of digital labour and virtual work, 2)=20 systematic distinctions and typologies of forms of digital labour and 3) = theorizing the transformations that digital labour is undergoing. All submitted papers should be theoretical and profoundly engage with=20 the meanings of various concepts. Rather than presenting case studies,=20 papers should focus on fundamental theoretical concepts and discuss=20 definitions. They can also explore the relations between concepts, the=20 historical development of these concepts, typologies and the relevance=20 of different theoretical approaches. The special issue is interested in=20 theorizing the broader picture of digital labour. We welcome submissions that cover one or more of the following or=20 related questions. 1) Concepts of Labour * How should concepts such of work and labour be defined and what are=20 the implications of these definitions for understanding digital labour=20 and virtual work? * Which theoretical or philosophical definitions of work and labour=20 exist and which of them are meaningful for understanding virtual work=20 and digital labour? * What is the difference between labour and digital labour? What is part = of digital labour and what is not? Which online, offline, knowledge,=20 physical, industrial, agricultural etc forms of work are part of it or=20 not part of it? Is digital labour only knowledge labour that happens=20 online or do we have to extend the concept to the offline realms and=20 physical labour? Where is the demarcation line? Is digital labour also=20 labour where digital technologies are of vast importance or not? Does=20 digital labour involve the physical forms of work necessary for=20 producing digital labour? * Is there a difference between 'work' and 'labour' and if so, how does=20 it matter for the discussion of digital labour and virtual work? * What is the role of Karl Marx=E2=80=99 theory of labour and surplus val= ue for=20 understanding digital labour and virtual work? * Is the traditional distinction between the material base and=20 superstructure in the realm of social media and digital labour still=20 valid or does it become blurred or undermined? Are new information and=20 communication technologies and social media, their production and use=20 (n)either part of the base (n)or the superstructure or are they part of=20 both? *If in the agricultural and industrial age land and nature have been the = traditional objects of labour, how do the objects of labour and=20 productive forces look like in the world of digital media and digital=20 labour and how are these productive forces linked to class relations? * What is meant by concepts such as digital labour, telework, virtual=20 work, cyberwork, immaterial labour, knowledge labour, creative work,=20 cultural labour, communicative labour, informational work, digital=20 craft, service work, prosumption, consumption work, online work,=20 audience labour, playbour (play labour) in the context of digital media? = How should they be defined? How are they related? How have they=20 developed historically? How are these concepts related to the wider=20 social context and the existing capitalist order? How can a systematic=20 typology of the existing literature in this research field be=20 constructed? Should any of these concepts be rejected? Why? Why not? Do=20 any of these concepts especially matter? If so, why? * What is the etymological history of concepts such as work and labour=20 in different languages and how have these concepts changed throughout=20 history? Which of these historically different meanings are important=20 for understanding digital labour and virtual work? * What are historically new aspects of digital labour, what are=20 predecessors of digital work and which aspects of digital labour have=20 parallels to the pre-digital era? * What is the role of the concept of value for understanding digital=20 labour and virtual work as well as =E2=80=9Cimmaterial=E2=80=9D labour, a= ffective=20 labour, knowledge/communicative/information work etc in the context of=20 digital media? 2) Forms of Labour * What is the role of agricultural, industrial, service and knowledge=20 work in the world of digital labour and how are they related? How are=20 different modes of production related to each other in the world of=20 digital labour? * What are the important dimensions for constructing a typology of work=20 that takes place in online spaces (e.g. crowdsourcing, online gambling,=20 gold farming, turking, microwork, production of and trade with virtual=20 items, clickwork etc)? * How can a typology of alternative forms of online work that rejects=20 the profit logic be constructed (e.g. free software development,=20 creative commons and copyleft publishing, Wikipedia collaboration,=20 peer-production, open access publishing, file sharing etc)? * Which forms of labour are involved in the global value chain of=20 digital media, how do they differ from each other and how are they=20 related (e.g. mining, hardware assemblage, call centre work, software=20 engineering, transport labour, prosumer labour, e-waste labour etc)? 3) Transformations of Labour * How can blurring boundaries between toil and play, labour and leisure=20 time, the factory and society, production and consumption, public and=20 private, the sphere of production and reproduction, economic value and=20 social wealth in the realm of digital media be conceptualized? * What is the relationship between creativity, participation,=20 do-it-yourself culture on the one hand and exploitation, alienation=20 and/or emancipation on the other hand? * What is the role of the concepts of the working class and the=20 proletariat for theorizing digital labour? * How would the concepts of digital work and digital labour look like in = a post-capitalist society? Does the post-capitalist end of the working=20 class also mean the end of and abolition of digital work? Or just the=20 end of digital labour? What are the anthropologically constant and the=20 historically variable dimensions of productive human activities? How=20 should they be conceptualized and named? How are they related to the=20 realm of digital media? Do concepts such as anti-work, zerowork, the=20 abolition of work, post-work and the right to be lazy take the=20 anthropological, creative and productive aspects of human life that are=20 expressed on digital media into account? What are the elements of=20 digital media activities that will continue to exist in a=20 post-capitalist society? What are the historically continuous and=20 discontinuous elements of digital labour? * What has historically been the role of communications =E2=80=93 includi= ng=20 digital communications =E2=80=93 in labour transformations and in the=20 construction of global labour chains (e.g. global division of labour and = social interdependencies; the concept of collective worker /=20 Gesamtarbeiter; socialization of labour etc.)? Deadlines: Abstract submission: July 31, 2013 All abstracts will be reviewed and decisions on acceptance/rejection=20 will be communicated to the authors at the latest by the end of summer 20= 13. Full paper submission: January 15, 2014 Please submit article titles, author names and contact data and=20 abstracts of 200-400 words to: Marisol Sandoval, marisol.sandoval@uti.at Marx, Karl. 1845. Theses on Feuerbach. In The German ideology, including = Theses on Feuerbach and Introduction to the critique of political=20 economy, 569-571. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books. About the Editors Marisol Sandoval is Lecturer in Culture, Policy & Management at City=20 University London. Christian Fuchs is Professor of Social Media at the University of=20 Westminster and editor of tripleC. Jernej Amon Prodnik is PhD candidate at the University of Ljubljana=E2=80= =99s=20 Faculty of Social Sciences. Sebastian Sevignani is PhD candidate at the University of Salzburg's=20 Faculty of Cultural & Social Sciences and a research associate in the=20 Unified Theory of Information Research Group (UTI). Website:=20 http://sevignani.uti.at Thomas Allmer is PhD candidate at the University of Salzburg and member=20 of the Unified Theory of Information Research Group. Website:=20 http://allmer.uti.at About the Journal: tripleC Editor: Christian Fuchs, University of Westminster tripleC (http://www.triple-c.at): Communication, Capitalism & Critique.=20 Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society focuses = on information society studies and studies of media, digital media,=20 information and communication in society with a special interest in=20 critical studies in these thematic areas. The journal has a special interest in disseminating articles that focus=20 on the role of information (cognition/knowledge, communication,=20 cooperation) in contemporary capitalist societies. For this task,=20 articles should employ critical theories and/or empirical research=20 inspired by critical theories and/or philosophy and ethics guided by=20 critical thinking as well as relate the analysis to power structures and = inequalities of capitalism, especially forms of stratification such as=20 class, racist and other ideologies and capitalist patriarchy. tripleC is a transdisciplinary journal that is open to contributions=20 from all disciplines and approaches that critically and with a focus on=20 power structures analyze the role of cognition, communication,=20 cooperation, information, media, digital media and communication in the=20 information society. tripleC is indexed in the databases Communication=20 and Mass Media Complete and Scopus. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org